Researchers say a new drug-delivery implant could help patients with hard-to-treat bladder cancer avoid losing their bladders — and stay cancer-free for years.
A new slow-release implant has shown unprecedented success in wiping out bladder cancer in more than 80 percent of patients, ...
The IMvigor010 trial showed that Signatera-guided treatment with Tecentriq improved disease-free survival and overall ...
The experts agreed that perioperative approaches in muscle-invasive bladder cancer continue to evolve. Ongoing data will ...
The key takeaway is that adjuvant pelvic radiotherapy after surgery can substantially improve pelvic control without causing ...
A slow drug-release system has proven highly effective in treating certain bladder cancer patients whose tumors were previously unresponsive to therapy. A new targeted drug delivery system known as TA ...
An innovative new treatment option for bladder cancer, recently approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, has been performed for the first time in Maryland.
Bladder cancer is the ninth most common cancer in the world, the fourth most common cancer in men, and the 11th most common ...
Although bladder cancer ranks as the sixth most common cancer in the United States, with approximately 85,000 new cases diagnosed each year, it continues to receive limited awareness, advocacy, and ...
Non-muscle invasive bladder cancer is cancer that’s only in the inner lining of your bladder. It hasn’t grown into the muscle wall. Your doctor may also call it superficial bladder cancer, urothelial ...
TAR-200, a small drug-releasing implant, wiped out tumors in most patients with high-risk bladder cancer. Its slow, ...